by Treetop » Sat Mar 28, 2015 11:36 am
By the end of it I had things set up a few different ways. I lost lots of fish to power outages more then once. I looked into non electric means to run things, and it can be done but would be really expensive if you werent using a larger amount of water, for something this small it would have to work well and reliably. I never did get to much in the way of fish out of it. Not compared to the effort and money involved. Honestly I dont think its worth it, if I had a small pond that is much different. Which is weird, reading online youd think smallscale aquaculture was cheap and easy with lots of benefits. Why grow inferior land based plants with a set up that can fail so readily if you loose power, that literally are potentially poisoning you? This fact is simply glossed over by most. growing the food for fish as I likely covered works well and saves needed infrastructure. Using lower densities takes away the need to have constant power but with the amount of water I was working with we are talking a handful of fish. Ive talked to large numbers of people raising fish like this in various ways, among them still people claiming its so easy and affordable. I can only assume they never bothered with a regular garden for their greens, and rabbits or ducks or chickens for their meat. My greens from the garden are easy to grow and never toxic as such systems can cause my rabbits or goats have never died over power outages and dont need expensive methods to block such an occurrence. I think people just get excited because they think it mirrors cycles in nature. Its definitely not cheap as many claim, youll spend several thousand minimum, much more for elaborate set ups for chickens, goats and rabbits. Youll need constant power, another major expense. The smaller the system the more intensely you need to monitor it and ensure ph and the like are in balance. I know when I need to feed my animals or water plants, no need to check on them beyond that all the time. Many also claim its easy, pffft not much more effort to milk my goats daily then it was to check on my fish set up. thousands of calories DAILY from the goat milk while also giving me meat a few times a year. Cant grow food for the fish over the cold months readily either unless I had a heated greenhouse, or underground one or something expensive.
Most Ive told just think I must have done it wrong, lots of people out there claiming how easy it is, and cheap. I didnt do it wrong though, I did play with water based plants but thats in fact easier and less expensive. Id LOVE to set up a small pond, variables much different that way. Actually discussed it on forums with others who do it, who lambasted me for saying all of the above, but then I list all the issues and ask them how they get around it. Lots of time and money of course. You could easily set up for goats, chickens or ducks and rabbits with a few hundred bucks, with no need for power and you cant even get decent tanks for your fish for that price let alone anything else. If you want meat from scratch and started with rabbits, you can have a steady supply readily within a few months, and little effort beyond having a good space for it, and dropping in some food and water daily. I grew and gathered their food most last summer and it wasnt much of a chore even then. You could have calories daily from day 1 if you bought a goat in milk, pretty easy to do in the spring. Carp take a few years to get to breeding size, the tilapia needed heating in winter but breed easy and young, but even with them and a few thousand gallons of water I wasnt getting the amounts of fish Id expect from the hype. I even had nice and respectable growth rates compared to my stocking densities. Not the top, but well above the median.
That said, based on all I did, If I lived in a place I could have a few ponds readily I would, at that size its a whole different game and you could get much more out of ponds or small lakes then one would generally associate with a body of water that size, you get buffers for all the issues I mentioned, and could have a productive set up without the possibility the power fails wiping you out, and without having to constantly track several variables to ensure the system is balanced, or rely on infrastructure that needs replaced repeatedly over time. I spent alot of time and money on this project. At this small scale, imo (to each his own of course) it just wasnt worth my efforts. It was a labor of love to be sure. If it was wetter here, Id set up a few ponds for the isreali carp if I can find them or for koi. I ate a few carp, they were great out of clean water. Even better if it were legal Id have a variation of the old asian systems with several fish, the common carps but also several asian types that really work well together. One of them, the black carp if I remember right, was lower in number in the setup and ate the wastes of the other fish, they were said to be the tastiest and most expensive. Or tilapia if in a warmer area, tilapia are so neat, but need it warm. A few ponds in a place warm enough for tilapia outside year round could be very productive.
At this point Ill get and raise a few of the israeli carp if I can get them, seems unlikely though. Apparently was a common bait in ohio and some close by areas until recently. should have kept what I used to have, didnt realize they are kinda taboo to use and apparently were mostly phased out, but by practice not by law. So instead Ill likely end up with a few koi, and Ill set back up all my tanks for a much lower number of fish. Just because. At lower densities I wont have any issues, I wont really be able to eat fish though, but I can water the garden from it as I used to, which the garden LOVES.